Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Antibiotic treatment--usually stage-dependent in terms of the active agent, duration and form of application--is the central pillar in the management of Lyme disease. In the late stages of borreliosis, symptoms may persist despite extensive and repeated antibiotic treatment. In this phase, borreliosis-typical neuropathy and neuralgia, chronic fatigue and neuropsychological deficits predominate. Irrespective of whether renewed antibiotic treatment is indicated or not, symptomatic treatment must be continued.
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PMID:[Pain, fatigue, depression after borreliosis. Antibiotics used up--what next?]. 1472 26

Thalidomide, an agent with antiangiogenic and immunomodulatory properties, is therapeutically effective in multiple myeloma, leprosy, and autoimmune diseases. The most common clinical toxicities of thalidomide are constipation, neuropathy, fatigue, sedation, rash, tremor, and edema. We here describe for the first time a patient who developed leukocytoclastic vasculitis during therapy with thalidomide. Of the 260 patients treated with thalidomide in our institution, this is the first patient who developed autoimmune disease. We conclude that patients with malignant disorders who are treated with thalidomide should be carefully monitored for the development of autoimmune disorders. Whether autoimmune phenomena also occur during treatment with new drugs such as PS-341 or potent immunomodulatory agents remains to be evaluated.
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PMID:Development of leukocytoclastic vasculitis in a patient with multiple myeloma during treatment with thalidomide. 1462 89

Peritoneal mesothelioma is a rare malignancy that is seen in patients exposed to asbestos or in young women with no known exposure to asbestos. The clinical features of the disease are similar in these two groups, and include peritoneal carcinomatosis, ascites, thrombocytemia, systemic symptoms (fever and night sweats), and hypercoagulability. There is no known curative therapy for this disease. Cisplatin has activity in 25% of patients. Mesothelial cells are known to contain high levels of carboxylesterase, a key enzyme in the activation of Irinotecan (CPT-11) to SN-38. This retrospective review of our experience in combining cisplatin 50 or 60 mg/m2 i.v. or i.p. on day 1 with CPT-11 50 or 60 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1, 8, and 15. Courses were repeated every 4 weeks x 6. If i.p. administration of cisplatin were feasible, it was the preferred route. Response to treatment was based on RECIST criteria. Fourteen men and 3 women, median age 62 years (35-76 years) and median PS 1 (0-2) were treated. Median number of courses was two for nonresponders and six for responders. The overall response rate was 24%, but 76% of patients improved on treatment. Median survival is not reached. Grade > or = 2 side effects included anemia (n = 6), neutropenia (n = 3), nausea/vomiting (n = 4), and constipation (n = 2). Grade 1 side effects were fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, alopecia, diarrhea, neuropathy, and gastric reflux. There were no grade > or = 3 hematologic toxicities. The combination of cisplatin and CPT-11 is well tolerated and has clinical benefits in patients with peritoneal mesothelioma.
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PMID:Cisplatin and irinotecan (CPT-11) for peritoneal mesothelioma. 1462 25

Hypericum perforatum is an herbaceous perennial plant, also known as "St. John's wort", used popularly as a natural antidepressant. Although some clinical and experimental studies suggest it has some properties similar to conventional antidepressants, the proposed mechanism of action seems to be multiple: a non-selective blockade of the reuptake of serotonin, noradrenaline and dopamine; an increase in density of serotonergic and dopaminergic receptors and an increased affinity for GABAergic receptors; moreover, the inhibition of monoaminoxidase enzyme activity has been involved. In any case, the increase of monoamine concentrations in the synaptic cleft resembles several actions exerted by clinically effective antidepressants. In the present article, we review some of the controversial evidence derived from clinical and experimental studies suggesting that H. perforatum exerts antidepressant-like actions, and we also review some of its side effects, such as nausea, rash, fatigue, restlessness, photosensitivity, acute neuropathy, and even episodes of mania and serotonergic syndrome when administered simultaneously with other antidepressant drugs. All of the foregoing suggests that H. perforatum extracts appear to exert potentially significant pharmacological activity involving several neurotransmission systems supposed to be involved in the pathophysiology of depression. However, little information regarding the safety of H. perforatum is available, including potential herb-drug interactions. There is a need for additional research on the pharmacological and biochemical activity of H. perforatum, as well as its side-effects and its several bioactive constituents to further elucidate the mechanisms of antidepressant actions.
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PMID:A review of clinical and experimental observations about antidepressant actions and side effects produced by Hypericum perforatum extracts. 1469 32

Patients with multiple myeloma (MM) with mutated RAS are less likely to respond to chemotherapy and have a shortened survival. Therefore, targeting RAS farnesylation may be a novel approach to treatment of MM. We evaluated the activity and tolerability of the farnesyltransferase (FTase) inhibitor tipifarnib (Zarnestra) in a phase 2 trial as well as its ability to inhibit protein farnesylation and oncogenic pathways in patients with relapsed MM. Forty-three patients (median age, 62 years [range, 33-82 years]) with a median of 4 (range, 1-6) chemotherapy regimens entered the study. Tipifarnib, 300 mg orally twice daily, was administered for 3 weeks every 4 weeks. The most common toxicity was fatigue occurring in 66% of patients. Other toxicities included diarrhea, nausea, neuropathy, anemia, and thrombocytopenia. Sixty-four percent of the patients had disease stabilization. Treatment with tipifarnib suppressed FTase (but not geranylgeranyltransferase I) in bone marrow and peripheral blood mononuclear cells and also inhibited the farnesylation of HDJ-2 in unfractionated mononuclear cells and purified myeloma cells. Inhibition of farnesylation did not correlate with disease stabilization. Finally, tipifarnib decreased the levels of phosphorylated Akt and STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3) but not Erk1/2 (extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 and 2) in bone marrow cells. We conclude that tipifarnib is tolerable, can induce disease stabilization, and can inhibit farnesylation and oncogenic/tumor survival pathways.
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PMID:Farnesyltransferase inhibitor tipifarnib is well tolerated, induces stabilization of disease, and inhibits farnesylation and oncogenic/tumor survival pathways in patients with advanced multiple myeloma. 1472 2

We performed a pilot study to assess the safety of thalidomide in combination with standard chemo-therapy in patients with advanced non small-cell lung cancer. Patients with unresectable stage IIIA, IIIB, or IV disease were enrolled starting in July 1999. Patients received paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 over 3 hours and carboplatin area under the curve = 6.0 with thalidomide at a starting daily dose of 200 mg. The thalidomide dose was escalated, if tolerated, by 200 mg per week to a target dose of 1000 mg per day and could continue for up to 6 months. Patients with stages IIIA and IIIB disease without effusion received radiotherapy with concurrent thalidomide after 2 cycles of chemotherapy. Nine patients were enrolled: one with IIIA disease, three with IIIB disease, and five with stage IV disease. Five of nine patients had previously been treated with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. The most frequent side effects noted were fatigue, myalgia, constipation, neuropathy, and myelosuppression. Sixteen of the 17 (94%) episodes of grade 3 or 4 hematologic toxicity occurred in the five patients who had previously received chemotherapy, although no patients developed neutropenic fever. The median tolerated daily thalidomide dose was 600 mg. One patient with IIIA disease had a partial response after 2 cycles of chemotherapy and went on to receive radiotherapy with thalidomide. One patient with stage IV disease continues on this study with stable disease at 187 days. The median time to progression was 118 days. This preliminary data supports the further investigation of this combination in chemotherapy-naive patients with advanced non small-cell lung cancer.
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PMID:Pilot and safety trial of carboplatin, paclitaxel, and thalidomide in advanced non small-cell lung cancer. 1473 37

Paclitaxel is a cytotoxic agent with proven antitumour activity in metastatic breast cancer. Weekly administration of paclitaxel has demonstrated sustained efficacy together with a more favourable toxicity profile (e.g. less myelotoxicity) than the 3-weekly administration. This study evaluates the activity and toxicity of weekly paclitaxel (Taxol(R)) as first-line chemotherapy in elderly patients (>70 years of age) with hormone-refractory metastatic breast cancer. Patients with metastatic breast cancer received 80 mg/m(2) paclitaxel administered weekly on days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle. Additional cycles were given until disease progression, or unacceptable toxicity. A dose increase to 90 mg/m(2) was allowed in the absence of toxicity. 26 Patients received a total of 101 cycles (median 4, range 1-11). 22 patients completed at least two cycles (six administrations). In 23 patients who were evaluable for response, there were 10 partial responses (38%), 9 patients with stable disease (35%), while 4 patients had disease progression (15%). The median duration of response was 194 days (>6 months). Overall treatment was relatively well tolerated, but 8 patients (32%) had to prematurely discontinue treatment because of fatigue. Neuropathy >grade 1 was noted only after five or more cycles in 4 patients. Weekly paclitaxel at this dose and schedule is an effective treatment regimen in the elderly patient with metastatic breast cancer, and is feasible, but yields relevant fatigue in a subset of patients.
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PMID:Weekly paclitaxel as first-line chemotherapy for elderly patients with metastatic breast cancer. A multicentre phase II trial. 1474 52

Both paclitaxel and gemcitabine (Gemzar) have shown activity and manageable toxicity when used as single agents in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer. This phase II study evaluated their use in combination for metastatic breast cancer patients whose disease recurred or progressed following treatment with anthracycline-containing regimens. Twenty-nine patients ranging from 32 to 68 years of age received paclitaxel at 175 mg/m2 i.v. over 3 hours on day 1 and gemcitabine at 1,000 mg/m2 i.v. on days 1, 8, and 15 every 28 days. Because of unacceptable thrombocytopenia in the first five patients, the gemcitabine schedule was changed to days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle for the remainder of the study. All 29 patients were evaluable for response and toxicity. Seventeen patients (59%) were considered truly anthracycline- or anthracenedione-refractory. A total of 137 cycles (median: 4 per patient) were administered. The regimen was well tolerated. Grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia was observed in 5 (18.5%) of the first 27 cycles and in 6 (5.4%) of the 110 cycles following dosage reduction (P = .04). Five patients had grade 1 and two patients had grade 3 neuropathy. Eight patients had grade 3 neutropenia, two had grade 4 neutropenia with fever at the higher dosage, and eight had grade 1/2 myalgia and fatigue. Five patients (17%) had a complete response and 11 (38%) a partial response, yielding an objective response rate of 55% (95% confidence interval = 36%-73%). Six patients (20.7%) had stable disease. Median response duration was 8 months (range: 4-26 months), and median overall survival was 12 months (range: 4-48+ months). Survival at 1, 2, 3, and 4 years was 45%, 30%, 20%, and 10%, respectively. The combination of paclitaxel on day 1 with gemcitabine on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle appears to have promising activity in heavily pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer. Phase III trials comparing this promising doublet to paclitaxel monotherapy and to other chemotherapeutic strategies for advanced breast cancer will clarify the role of this regimen.
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PMID:Paclitaxel and gemcitabine as salvage treatment in metastatic breast cancer. 1476 2

Based on the activity of single-agent thalidomide demonstrated in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, investigators have evaluated the role of this agent in the treatment of earlier stage disease. Two key phase II trials of thalidomide plus dexamethasone in patients with previously untreated symptomatic multiple myeloma have yielded overall response rates of 64% to 73%. Comparable response rates, reduced toxicity, and increased patient convenience with oral administration suggest it may offer an alternative to standard infusional chemotherapies, such as vincristine/doxorubicin/dexamethasone (VAD), before stem cell mobilization and high-dose chemotherapy in patients with active disease; further study is warranted. Two key phase II trials of single-agent thalidomide in patients with smoldering/indolent (asymptomatic) disease have yielded overall response rates of approximately 35%, and further study of thalidomide in this setting is also indicated. The primary toxicities of thalidomide-based therapy are neuropathy, sedation/fatigue, constipation, and rash. Studies of thalidomide in combination with dexamethasone suggest toxicities of both agents may be increased due to the synergy of these agents. Phase III trials of thalidomide in newly diagnosed symptomatic multiple myeloma or smoldering/indolent disease are ongoing.
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PMID:Thalidomide in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma and overview of experience in smoldering/indolent disease. 1501 92

Intolerance of gluten, resposible for Coeliac disease, is essentially shown by an auto-immune enteropathy, even if the cutaneous manifestation (herpetiform dermatitis) and perhaps certain neurological signs (cerebral syndrome, peripheral neuropathy) may be independent as well as associated with the intestinal illness. This affection is of immunological nature, occuring in a genetic field that predisposes to the illness (familial form: concordance of 70% in homozygote twins; 90% of patients show an HLA molecule of type DQ2, DQ8 in almost all the other cases. The exogenous factor is the gluten content contained in wheat, rye and barley, more precisely by the intermediary "the prolamines" which are the "reactive" element that induces a the same time an inflammatory reaction of type TH11 locally (expressed by the histological aspect of a duodenal biopsy evolving as villous atrophy) and a humoral response with production of anti-gliadine and anti-transglutaminase antibodies (the role of the latter enzyme is intervention in the local transformation of antigens to make them antigenic). It is an illness of adults as well as children and this point must now be emphasized. Recent epidemiological studies insist on a high prevalence (1/300 in Europe). Clinical expression, at the start very polymorphic and so misleading, before the appearance of the more classical signs of malabsorption and development, always feared, towards a lymphoma. These signs are haematological (anemia of various types, hyper platelets by hyposplenism, haemorrhagic signs) cutaneous (herpetiform dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis) mucosal (aphtose), hepatic (cytolysis), neurophysical (fatigue, troubles of behaviour, cerebral syndrome, neuropathy) and osteo-articulitis (osteopenia, arthralgias, diffuse pains). The association of certain auto-immune illnesses must be emphasized (diabetes, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Gougerot disease, primitive biliary cirrhosis). To think early of the possibility of intolerance to gluten, is to give the means of a very easy diagnosis (measurement of anti-gliadin, anti-endomysium and anti-transglutaminase, and secondarily duodenal biopsy if necessary), and it is early elimination of gluten food which will make the various clinical manifestations disappear and so prevent the risk of evolution to a tumoral pathology.
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PMID:[A great imitator for the allergologist: intolerance to gluten]. 1513 80


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